Canadian True Crime - 66 The Murder of Sina Parsi
Episode Date: May 1, 2020TORONTO, ONTARIO - In 2015, successful construction entrepreneur Sina Parsi left for a soccer game, but didn't return home. An unexpected story would unravel.Thanks for supporting my sponsors!See the ...special offer codes hereFind out what perks you can get as a patron:www.patreon.com/CanadianTrueCrimeCredits:Research and writing: Stephanie Moore and Kristi LeeNarration, music arrangement: Kristi LeeAudio editing: We Talk of DreamsAll credits and information sources can be found on the page for this episode at www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi everyone, I hope you're doing well.
Well, as well as can be expected right now.
It's crazy time, so I hope you're going easy on yourself
and practicing a bit of self-care.
Remember, you're no good to anyone else
unless you take care of yourself.
So, I'm coming to you with my tail between my legs.
Right after I promised that I would never make you wait
for two weeks between multi-part episodes again,
it turns out that the next case is also a multi-parter.
I can definitely do one of these a month,
but I can't do two of them right now
while my kids are at home
because it might put my marriage in jeopardy.
So, today's episode is a Patreon episode.
It's a fairly straightforward story,
so that's why it's a shorter episode,
but it's every bit as heart-wrenching
as all of the other cases.
And this allows me to buy myself some much-needed time
to plan a bit better, which I've never had.
And then, on May the 15th,
we'll be part one of the next two-parter,
which again, will only be a week apart.
So, for two months in a row,
you will have three episodes of Canadian True Crime.
Now, if you're a patron
and have listened to today's episode already,
I apologize, but head to Patreon
to find out what's next for you.
And I'm sorry for being annoying.
I do have the best intentions
and I'm always trying to improve,
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how much this whole virus thing would cramp my style.
So, as always, thanks for your patience
and your understanding.
And on that note, it's on with the show.
This podcast contains course language, adult themes,
and content of a violent and disturbing nature.
Listener discretion is advised.
MUSIC
It was June 9th, 2015,
in a village called Kleinberg,
about 45 minutes' drive northwest of Toronto.
Roya and Sina Parsi,
a married couple in their early 30s,
each had plans for the night.
Roya was planning on an overnight visit with her family
and her husband, Sina,
was headed out to a game with some friends.
He was an avid soccer player and fan.
In fact, they were both soccer fans
and enjoyed watching games together.
By all accounts, they were a happy, loving couple
who'd been married for five years
and had plans to start a family.
But now, they were enjoying some independence.
Roya said goodbye to Sina.
Although her husband would be home later,
she was staying the night with her family,
so they knew they wouldn't be seeing each other again
until the next day.
As Roya left the house,
Sina told her that she looked beautiful
and complimented her on the smell of her new perfume.
The next day, Roya couldn't get hold of Sina.
She had returned home, but he wasn't there.
She was worried, and so, too,
were the employees of the successful roofing
construction firm that he owned.
When Roya found out that Sina hadn't turned up for work either,
she knew that something must have been terribly wrong
because everyone who knew Sina knew it was out of character
for him not to be where he said he was going to be.
She found out that Sina had been at the soccer game
and had left as usual, but no one saw him after that.
When Roya got hold of Sina's family
to tell them that she hadn't heard anything,
they immediately suspected her
of being involved in his disappearance.
Roya was taken aback by the allegations
and immediately called the police
to report her husband missing.
She explained that Sina worked hard
at the success of his firm
and that this just wasn't something he would ever do.
She feared that some type of great harm
had come his way.
This is Christy, and you're listening
to Canadian True Crime, Episode 66.
The police took the situation very seriously
and started chasing leads
to see if they could find the missing entrepreneur.
They traced his cell phone signal
and the next day it led them to the parking lot
of a strip mall in the city of Toronto,
about 25 minutes drive south of where Sina was last seen.
There, close to the Tim Hortons,
they found his black Dodge Ram pickup truck.
With this discovery,
they had to strengthen their efforts in the investigation.
The homicide unit took over even though at that time
they still considered it a missing person's investigation.
The unit began tracking 32-year-old Sina's whereabouts,
first by looking at security surveillance footage
taken from Tim Hortons.
He parked his car and then footage showed him
walking through the parking lot past his truck
and down the road towards a wooded area.
This was at about 11, 20 p.m.
Next, someone found Sina's wallet in that wooded area,
which is known as Smith Park, and turned it in.
Bank records showed that $400 had been withdrawn
from his account.
On the Friday, three days after Sina was last seen,
police released details to the public,
asking anyone with information
to call York Regional Police or Crime Stoppers.
Sina was described as Middle Eastern,
five foot six inches tall with a tanned complexion,
a slim build and short black hair.
When he was last seen at soccer,
he was wearing a blue polo shirt and black jogging pants,
but police said he may have had a change of clothes with him.
Investigators went on to say
that they believed Sina didn't have his cell phone on him.
He hadn't made contact with friends or family
since he was last seen.
Sina's wife, Roya, spoke to the media
at the scene on Friday.
This is a very, this is a very weird situation
that he would come 1130 right after soccer game
to this area and walk in this area
because the camera shows that he parked the car in the truck
and he walked south towards the park.
And that was the last scene from the camera.
She said she was trying her best to stay positive and hopeful.
Quote, he's my husband, my best friend,
he's everything to me, I just want him healthy and alive.
I'm not going to think of anything else,
I just want him healthy.
Meanwhile, police had been gathering CCTV footage
from the area to track Sina's movements
after he looked to be going into the wooded area.
They soon spotted him near the park
where he met up with two people.
In the footage, you could see they began walking together
and he was then seen willingly entering
an apartment building with them.
It didn't take long before police found out the identities
of the two people that Sina was seen with.
They were a couple called Sabrina and Clyde
and had been living in an apartment together
on the eighth floor of the building for about two years.
First priority for investigators
was to get into that apartment.
No one was home, so they had to force entry
and what they found inside the apartment
both shocked and alarmed them.
It was the body of Sina Parsi.
After devastating Sina's wife and family
with the news that his body had been found,
the police needed to move fast
to locate Clyde and Sabrina.
They also had to find out how the couple knew Sina,
why he was there in the first place
and of course what had happened to him.
They announced to the public that Sina's body had been found
and that arrest warrants for first degree murder
had been issued for two people who were on the run.
Clyde Marshall was described as 36 years old,
six feet tall, 145 pounds with brown hair, blue eyes
and a tattoo on the right side of his neck and arm.
His companion, Sabrina Schuart,
was described as 27 years old,
five foot seven, 130 pounds with brown hair.
Clyde was originally from New Brunswick
and Sabrina from Quebec.
Police said they were believed to be traveling together
and might also have a large breed dog with them
adding that there was more information to come.
They urged the public to contact police immediately
if anyone saw them or knew where they were.
Social media posts from law enforcement agencies
started using the hashtag Sabrina and Clyde
and media soon followed suit.
Public interest in the case was high.
The next day, the police staged a press conference.
This is Detective Sean Mahoney
from the Toronto Police Service.
Good afternoon.
We're here to update you on the investigation
into the death of Mr. Asinah Parsey.
We are releasing video surveillance,
a footage on this video surveillance
is captured the two offenders that are depicted
as they walk the hallway in that building.
These two are the wanted parties,
Sabrina Schuart and Clyde Marshall.
We have come to learn that Mr. Marshall
is also uses the name Marcus, Marcus Marshall.
We've had numerous tips and sightings
of these two individuals.
However, we have not verified at this time
any of those sightings.
We are asking for people to pay attention
to the clothing of these two offenders
as this is the clothing we believe
they are wearing at this time.
The footage shown of the hallway
was taken on the Wednesday morning at 4.10 a.m.
Remember, Asinah had last been seen
walking into the wooded area at 11.20 the night before,
just five hours beforehand.
Police confirmed that Asinah was inside the apartment
when Clyde Marshall and Sabrina Schuart left
and walked down to the elevators,
although they wouldn't confirm
whether he was dead or alive at the time.
In the footage, Sabrina was seen walking down the hall
towards the elevator,
wearing baggy black pants, white sneakers with red laces,
and a bulky blue anorak-type jacket with a hood.
Clyde was first seen walking behind her,
wearing a black hoodie and baggy jeans,
and they had a brown bull mastiff dog with them on a leash.
They both had backpacks on their backs.
In the footage, you can see Sabrina
go back into the apartment quickly,
seemingly to get something she'd forgotten
while Clyde reaches down to tie his shoelace.
Sabrina gets what she'd forgotten
and then walks back down the hall towards him.
The camera shows clear, high-resolution,
close-up shots of their faces.
Detective Mahoney went on to say he believed
Asinah entered Clyde and Sabrina's apartment
at around midnight,
but refused to discuss his cause of death,
implying that it was whole-back evidence,
which is, of course, information or detail
which is unique to the investigation
and would only be known to the killer or killers.
Detective Mahoney also refused to comment
on how Asinah and the fugitive couple
even knew each other.
He went on to say,
These individuals aren't terribly sophisticated
and added that they likely wouldn't leave the country.
He did mention they'd been unverified sightings of them
further north in Ontario and then in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
And because they had the large brown dog,
they would be easier to spot, he said,
although this would mean that they couldn't travel
by bus or train, so would likely need to hitchhike.
He also added that Clyde had an extensive criminal record
with a long history of violence
and both were to be considered armed and dangerous.
The police warned the public not to approach them.
Behind the scenes, the fact that the couple didn't attempt
to hide or dispose of Asinah's body
gave police a new concern.
This is often common with suspects that go on a crime spree
and the fear was that this murder
was the beginning of a spree killing.
The dog being with them was a positive
as it made them more identifiable.
But it was soon discovered that they'd already abandoned
their dog in Toronto within blocks
of leaving their apartment.
Several days earlier, the dog had been taken
to animal services in West Toronto
after a passerby saw it tied to a post outside a shop
along with a bag of dog food.
It didn't take the police long to match the dog
with the one that Sabrina and Clyde had been seen with.
And without their dog, the couple could move more freely.
In the meantime, Sabrina's father, Marciel Schuart,
spoke to the media from his home in Quebec.
Tearfully, he described his daughter as sweet and caring
and of good moral character.
He added that this was before she met Clyde Marshall.
He stated that he found it hard to believe
that she would be involved
in the violent death of another person.
And the only bad thing he could say about her
was that she had bad choices in boyfriends.
Marciel said he and Sabrina were very close
when she was a kid.
But the last few years, they'd had a tense relationship.
He added that Sabrina had completely changed.
According to Marciel, Sabrina met Clyde
when she worked at a Tim Horton's restaurant in Ottawa
that was near a homeless shelter.
He described Clyde as street smart.
Clyde was controlling and abusive towards Sabrina
and he tried to keep her away from her family.
Marciel said that he hadn't spoken to his daughter
for about four months
because Clyde controlled all aspects of Sabrina's life,
including how and when she interacted with her family.
The last time he spoke to her
was when she had sneaked out of the apartment
to call her father from a payphone
and wish him a happy birthday.
Marciel Schuert went on to say
that Sabrina would often have to call him
on borrowed cell phones,
so Clyde didn't see his number show up on their phone bill.
I'd just like to tell her that I love her
and I always will love her
and then I'd like her to give herself a hand
and face the consequences of what she did.
I think it's the normal thing you do.
She cannot run forever.
So Sabrina, please give yourself a hand.
You can't hide as we hurt.
You just can't do it.
You just can't hide, sweetheart.
When asked how he felt about Sena Parsi's family,
Marciel said,
I feel very sorry for that family.
I feel very, very sad for them.
Nothing new came from the case for the next few days.
The public speculated.
Some people had the theory
that it may have been a drug transaction gone wrong
because Clyde Marshall was known to sell drugs.
However, Sena's family and friends
insisted that he was not an illegal drug user.
They said there had to be another motive for the crime.
On Monday, June the 22nd,
13 days after Sena was last seen,
the Toronto Police staged another news conference
to renew interest in the case.
This is Detective Sergeant Michael Patterson.
Since last week,
we've learned quite a bit about Clyde and Sabrina.
Clyde has a long history of violence
when he's been in custody and out of custody.
Clyde is not afraid of authority
and has used violence against officers in the past.
He's known to carry a knife at all times
and will use it if confronted.
He should be considered armed and dangerous.
We've had hundreds of tips come in
and we're still following up on many of them.
At this point, none of the tips have amounted
to a confirmation of the whereabouts
of Clyde and Sabrina.
We're asking the public,
do not engage in the practice of picking up hitchhikers.
It's already a dangerous enough practice,
especially with these two on the loose.
And this message is directly to Clyde and Sabrina
if you're listening.
There's only one way to end this properly
and that is by turning yourself in.
Get yourself a lawyer,
take their advice and come and talk to me.
I'm willing to listen to your side.
He went on to say that Clyde Marshall had a dark history
and came from a family riddled with violence and abuse.
Sabrina didn't have a criminal history,
although police said they learned some pertinent information
about her family background
that they weren't willing to share and they never did.
It was confirmed that the police believed
she was a willing participant in Cena's murder.
The police released the footage
which showed Cena, Clyde and Sabrina
walking from the main road
and into the apartment building at around midnight.
Sabrina walked between the two men.
They looked friendly and it was clear
that Cena was entering the apartment freely
and without coercion.
Detective Sergeant Patterson confirmed
that when the couple left the apartment four hours later,
Cena was dead.
Police hoped that by showing what Cena was wearing
and that he was with Sabrina and Clyde,
it might jog the memory of anyone
who may have encountered them
along the five to seven minute walk
from the parking lot to their apartment.
The public were again asked to come forward
with any information they might have
on how Cena and the couple might know each other.
They knew from their investigation
that Cena went willingly with the couple
but they were still unsure of the connection
between the parties.
Police also said that they were still investigating a motive
and whether or not the murder was planned or spontaneous.
They indicated that Clyde and Sabrina
were involved in drug trafficking
but couldn't say whether that was related
to the motive for Cena's murder.
On Monday, June the 22nd, 2015,
almost two weeks after Cena passing was last seen,
there was a breakthrough.
A shopper was at a Walmart at Niagara Falls,
about two hours drive from Toronto
and spotted Sabrina and Clyde shopping in the store.
Niagara regional police were called
and the fugitive couple were arrested without incident
and charged with first degree murder.
Toronto police then drove down, picked them up
and brought them back to Toronto.
It was discovered that the day they were seen
fleeing their apartment building,
the day they ditched their dog,
they hopped on a bus to Niagara Falls
and had been camping in a tent in a nearby park ever since.
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The next day, after Clyde and Sabrina were arraigned,
Cena's wife, Roya, and her lawyer gave an interview
outside a Toronto courthouse.
Her lawyer, Jeff Pollock, began the interview
with Roya content to just stand beside him.
He stated that she and Cena were a happily married couple
for five years and hoped to start a family together someday,
which made burying Cena just one day before father's day,
especially difficult to bear.
He went on to describe how Cena and Roya
were living the Canadian dream,
with everything to look forward to together,
when his life was tragically cut short.
Roya then decided to speak.
The utter devastation was written all over her face
as she began by thanking the police and the public
for helping to catch the people allegedly responsible
for her husband's murder.
Cena was a wonderful man.
He was caring, he was love of my life,
he was my best friend.
It was everything to me.
He had a very great sense of humour,
and I missed him so, so, so much.
Behind the scenes, Roya Parsi had suffered greatly
in the days that followed her husband's disappearance.
Her in-laws at first believed she'd murdered Cena
and disposed of his body,
and even when they discovered
that there were other people involved,
his family believed that they were hired by Roya
to kill her husband.
The next day, Sabrina's father, Marciale Schuert,
called in to the Toronto Sun with his thoughts
after his daughter and her boyfriend had been caught.
Quote, it's a numb feeling.
You watch things unroll, you feel numb,
it's not my daughter, it can't be her.
It's just numbness, I guess.
I was worried for her well-being.
Besides that, I could imagine that it might be
a bit of relief for the Parsi family.
He had travelled to Toronto to pick up the couple's dog
that had been abandoned,
saying that he liked knowing that he had Sabrina's dog.
It gave him a feeling of being close to her.
He didn't know the dog's name, so he was calling it Sab
until his daughter could tell him the dog's real name.
He stated his reasons for adopting the dog.
Quote, to make Sabrina feel a little better
that her dog wasn't abandoned,
that somebody from the family has him.
I suppose that would make her happy,
not that it's going to change anything in her life right now.
In April of 2016, nearly a year after Clyde Marshall
and Sabrina Shuart had first been arrested,
the police announced that they had laid additional charges
on the pair, possession of an access
to child sexual abuse images, or child pornography.
The images were discovered when the police had reviewed
the couple's electronic devices and computer hard drives
as part of the investigation.
As we know, often the details of the police investigation,
including motive and what actually happened,
don't come out until the trial.
So still, the public and no doubt Roya Parsi
and Sena's family still didn't know
exactly what was going on.
In September of 2017, over two years after Sena Parsi's murder,
Sabrina Shuart and Clyde Marshall both pleaded guilty to murder,
Clyde to first degree murder, and Sabrina to second degree.
In an agreed upon statement of facts,
the Crown lawyer, Sean Horgan, shared the long-awaited details
of the night that took Sena Parsi's life.
It appeared from the evidence that Sena had placed an ad on Craigslist,
looking for a couple to help fulfill a fantasy of his,
to engage in a threesome,
which was to include light elements of bondage
with himself in the submissive role.
The Crown explained there was no indication
that he'd done this before,
and unfortunately, he encountered the wrong people
with deadly and tragic consequences.
Sena had little in common with the couple
other than a mutual desire to engage in consensual sex with strangers.
Unbeknownst to his wife, Sena had made secret arrangements
to meet up with Sabrina and Clyde
in the parking lot of the Tim Hortons near their apartment.
They instructed him to leave his pickup truck in the parking lot,
and he followed their instructions from there.
The Crown shared that while Sena thought he would get a night filled with pleasure,
he instead got a night of being robbed, tortured, bound, and extorted.
The Crown started with the story at the beginning of the night
when Sena was out with friends after a soccer game.
He abruptly left after getting a message from the couple
in response to his personal ad on Craigslist.
From the video that was released,
the public already knew he met the couple at the Tim Hortons,
the first time they'd ever met,
and the three of them walked together back to their apartment.
Text messages revealed that the agreement was for a threesome,
with all parties consenting and with Sena agreeing to have his wrists bound to the bed.
After the consensual portion of the sexual activities were over,
Clyde unexpectedly attacked Sena.
The Crown lawyer stated, quote,
The Crown went on to discuss Sena's injuries.
The rope was tied extremely tight, restricting blood flow to his extremities.
Sena was also viciously beaten in the face, head, chest, and abdomen.
Some of his injuries included a broken nasal bone,
a broken neck bone, and bleeding on the brain.
The Crown also stated that while it was Clyde Marshall who killed Sena,
it was Sabrina Schuart who aided and abetted him in confining the man,
knowing full well that Clyde's likely intention was to kill him all along.
At some point they forced Sena to give up his pin number,
and they withdrew $400 from his bank account before going on the run for 11 days.
It's unknown if robbery was the motive all along.
During sentencing, Justice John McMunn explained that Sabrina Schuart was complicit
in luring Sena Parsi to his death after promises of casual sex
with her and her live-in boyfriend Clyde Marshall.
The judge believed that the motive was to torture Sena
and extort him out of his ATM card and pin code,
which enabled them to withdraw the $400 from his account.
Justice McMunn called it, quote,
the brutal, sadistic killing of a defenceless, naked, and bound man.
The terror he must have felt in the hours before his death is unimaginable.
He didn't die a quick and painless death.
He went on to call Sabrina a willing accomplice
who lured him to his death by the offer of sex.
But ultimately it was Clyde Marshall who caused Sena Parsi's death
by ligature strangulation and blunt force trauma to his face and body.
Justice McMunn discussed the pain and repercussions they both caused
to Sena's wife, Roya, stating,
her life has become a nightmare that won't end.
Her husband's family has wrongly blamed her for his homicide and disowned her.
She's completely without blame,
and those who wish to blame her should take a look in the mirror.
Clyde Marshall decided to give a statement
and spoke directly to Roya Parsi at his hearing.
He stated,
an innocent man died a painful, brutal death
and his widow's life was destroyed.
Your husband did not deserve what happened to him
and part of my reason for pleading guilty
was to avoid you further suffering for having to go through the trial.
I wanted you to know why this happened, but I can't explain it to myself.
I did a horribly terrible thing.
For that, I'll go to prison.
During a moving victim impact statement,
Sena Parsi's widow Roya stated in part,
I was accused of murdering my own husband.
People made up versions of the story.
Sena's family abandoned me after his passing,
blaming me for not being a good wife and not doing enough to save him.
It was out of my control.
I loved my husband dearly and do so today and every day from this day forward,
but he was the unfortunate victim of a heinous act
at the merciless and vile hands of Clyde Marshall and Sabrina Schuart.
No amount of apologies and explanations from the deranged and twisted minds of these two
could ever ease the pain and suffering I'm going through.
Sena was my best friend and my love and he will be in my heart forever until we meet again.
I learned a lot of good things from him and even with his absence,
he helped me transform my life to be a better and stronger woman.
Roya Parsi stated that because of this horrific event,
she lost her vision of a future family,
her share in a roofing business that her husband spent 10 years building from scratch,
as well as her dream home in the countryside.
She stated that she thinks of the night her husband died often and it upsets her greatly.
She also told the court,
My heart and soul would ache in unbearable pain when I would think about what happened to him that night
when he was taken away from me.
I won't be the same person again and the absence of Sena's love in my heart will be with me until I die.
She also told the court that she thought about taking her own life many times
but a good friend talked her out of it.
And with that concluded, Justice McMahon passed down sentencing.
38-year-old Clyde Marshall was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 25 years.
30-year-old Sabrina Shewat was also sentenced to life
but her parole ineligibility period was 13 years
because she had pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of second-degree murder.
In a statement to CBC Toronto,
one of Clyde Marshall's lawyers, Alana Page,
said that he had the most tragic history she'd ever heard.
She didn't expand on why or what that had to do with the murder of Sena Parsi.
She did say that he recognized that he did a horrible thing
and then pleaded guilty in part to make sure that Roya Parsi wouldn't have to suffer through a prolonged trial
and neither would Clyde's own children.
She had revealed that Clyde Marshall is a father
although nothing more has been publicly revealed about this.
Quote,
Sadly, even after all of the events came to light,
Sena Parsi's family still blamed their son's wife Roya for his death.
They believed that if she'd been a better wife and stayed home that night,
he never would have been in the situation that brought about his death.
Nothing further has been said in the media about Roya or the case since that date.
Thanks for listening. This episode was researched and written by Stephanie Moore and I,
or is that Stephanie Moore and me?
And the audio production was by We Talk of Dreams who also wrote the theme song.
The host of the Beyond Bazaar True Crime podcast voiced the disclaimer.
I'll see you soon with another Canadian true crime story.
Thanks for watching.